<p>A ban on Olympic spectators in Tokyo meant Japanese weightlifting legend Yoshinobu Miyake wasn't able to cheer on his niece Hiromi in person on Saturday.</p>.<p>So the 81-year-old, who won gold at the last Tokyo Games in 1964, gathered the university team he manages in their training room to watch her medal attempt on TV.</p>.<p>When Miyake won his second Olympic gold in 1968 in Mexico City, his younger brother Yoshiyuki Miyake also won bronze in the same weight class.</p>.<p>Superhuman feats of strength run in the family — his niece Hiromi Miyake is also a double Olympic medallist, having won silver at London 2012 and bronze at Rio five years ago.</p>.<p>But her attempt for a third medal took place before empty stands, with almost all events at the pandemic-postponed Tokyo Games forced behind closed doors as Covid-19 cases surge.</p>.<p>Setting up a projector on a table in the gym, Yoshinobu Miyake had dressed up for the occasion in a grey suit with a pale shirt and tie — complete with slippers and socks.</p>.<p>The student weightlifters at Tokyo International University wore their team polo shirts and blue shorts as they sat on their gym benches to watch the event, surrounded by heavy equipment.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/grasping-for-air-heat-a-major-issue-at-olympic-tennis-venue-1012363.html" target="_blank">Grasping for air: Heat a major issue at Olympic tennis venue</a></strong></p>.<p>"One for all, all for one," said a banner written in English and Japanese on the wall of the training room, where everyone wore masks.</p>.<p>Miyake was disappointed, however — Hiromi finished in the women's 49kg category without a medal, while the first weightlifting gold of Tokyo 2020 was taken by China's Hou Zhihui.</p>.<p>"I felt sorry for her," the elderly former athlete said.</p>.<p>"She has strength. But she was uncertain. It means she wasn't able to empty her mind. She tried but couldn't. I thought this meant her muscles weakened."</p>.<p>It was the fifth time Hiromi had competed at an Olympics, which her uncle called a "wonderful" feat: "She contributed to the world and Japan."</p>.<p>While he expressed some tough love — saying she should have tried harder not to lose out, and that lifting may be getting harder at 35 years old — he also said the pandemic had made competition stiff.</p>.<p>"I think it was a cruel year for her. There are people who made it to the Olympics thanks to the postponement. That cannot be helped," he said.</p>.<p>Miyake said this Olympics would be the last for his family. But his students may well be the stars of future Games.</p>.<p>A 20-year-old member of the university team, Chisuzu Ando, said that since she started weightlifting, her goal has been to compete at the Olympics.</p>.<p>"So I wanted to go to the venue and enjoy the atmosphere. Unfortunately we couldn't... it's not like the usual Olympics. It's the lonely Olympics.</p>.<p>"But when I watched the competition, I thought to myself I will work hard to win a medal at the Olympics or to be number one or two."</p>
<p>A ban on Olympic spectators in Tokyo meant Japanese weightlifting legend Yoshinobu Miyake wasn't able to cheer on his niece Hiromi in person on Saturday.</p>.<p>So the 81-year-old, who won gold at the last Tokyo Games in 1964, gathered the university team he manages in their training room to watch her medal attempt on TV.</p>.<p>When Miyake won his second Olympic gold in 1968 in Mexico City, his younger brother Yoshiyuki Miyake also won bronze in the same weight class.</p>.<p>Superhuman feats of strength run in the family — his niece Hiromi Miyake is also a double Olympic medallist, having won silver at London 2012 and bronze at Rio five years ago.</p>.<p>But her attempt for a third medal took place before empty stands, with almost all events at the pandemic-postponed Tokyo Games forced behind closed doors as Covid-19 cases surge.</p>.<p>Setting up a projector on a table in the gym, Yoshinobu Miyake had dressed up for the occasion in a grey suit with a pale shirt and tie — complete with slippers and socks.</p>.<p>The student weightlifters at Tokyo International University wore their team polo shirts and blue shorts as they sat on their gym benches to watch the event, surrounded by heavy equipment.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/other-sports/grasping-for-air-heat-a-major-issue-at-olympic-tennis-venue-1012363.html" target="_blank">Grasping for air: Heat a major issue at Olympic tennis venue</a></strong></p>.<p>"One for all, all for one," said a banner written in English and Japanese on the wall of the training room, where everyone wore masks.</p>.<p>Miyake was disappointed, however — Hiromi finished in the women's 49kg category without a medal, while the first weightlifting gold of Tokyo 2020 was taken by China's Hou Zhihui.</p>.<p>"I felt sorry for her," the elderly former athlete said.</p>.<p>"She has strength. But she was uncertain. It means she wasn't able to empty her mind. She tried but couldn't. I thought this meant her muscles weakened."</p>.<p>It was the fifth time Hiromi had competed at an Olympics, which her uncle called a "wonderful" feat: "She contributed to the world and Japan."</p>.<p>While he expressed some tough love — saying she should have tried harder not to lose out, and that lifting may be getting harder at 35 years old — he also said the pandemic had made competition stiff.</p>.<p>"I think it was a cruel year for her. There are people who made it to the Olympics thanks to the postponement. That cannot be helped," he said.</p>.<p>Miyake said this Olympics would be the last for his family. But his students may well be the stars of future Games.</p>.<p>A 20-year-old member of the university team, Chisuzu Ando, said that since she started weightlifting, her goal has been to compete at the Olympics.</p>.<p>"So I wanted to go to the venue and enjoy the atmosphere. Unfortunately we couldn't... it's not like the usual Olympics. It's the lonely Olympics.</p>.<p>"But when I watched the competition, I thought to myself I will work hard to win a medal at the Olympics or to be number one or two."</p>